Mother Teresa, the Catholic nun who worked on behalf of the poor in the Indian city of Kolkata for a half-century, has been declared a saint by Pope Francis on Sunday.
Nineteen years after her death at the age of 87, the title was given to Teresa in a ceremony in St Peter's Square attended by tens of thousands of admirers.
Born Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu in 1910, in Skopje, Macedonia, the ethnic Albanian Teresa helped the poor in India for most of her life.
She was evil. Accepting money from dictators and sending it to the already super wealthy catholic church instead of caring for the people in her hospices who lived in terrible conditions, weren't given any kind of treatments and were baptized against their will.